Fifth Sunday of Easter
Cycle C
May 15, 2022
During World War II my great-uncle in Italy served as a “partisan”–a resistance fighter against the Nazis–and he gave his life for that cause. Resistance fighters like him fought throughout occupied Europe. They had to communicate secretly–often in code–as they tried to give hope to their captive brothers and sisters.
On these Easter Sundays we read from the Book of Revelation. This New Testament work is puzzling with its strange descriptions and symbolism. Many readers misunderstand its purpose and try to find involved, often convoluted references to specific events in our own time or the future. But much of Revelation refers to the time in which it was written. Like those resistance fighters in occupied Europe, the early Christians lived through persecution under Roman rule. I like to understand the Book of Revelation as a kind of “resistance literature”–a message of hope shared by persecuted Christians. Jesus has triumphed over evil; God’s enemies will be defeated, even death itself.
Today, we Christians face our own troubles. We need to hear encouragement, as the Book of Revelation tells us that all will be made new, that death is not the end. It’s an ancient message of hope as new as today’s dawn.